[For Beginners] Songs in the Key of Love: A Collection of Stevie Wonder’s Masterpieces
Stevie Wonder, the blind genius singer-songwriter with a voice that touches the soul.
He debuted at just 13 years old and has continued to captivate people around the world with his musical talent and exceptional expressive power.
Rooted in R&B and soul, his work spans a wide range of genres—including pop and funk—and his songs continue to resonate across generations.
In this feature, we’ll introduce some of Stevie Wonder’s most iconic masterpieces, especially for beginners!
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[For Beginners] Heart’s Love: A Collection of Stevie Wonder’s Masterpieces (111–120)
Sensuous WhisperStevie Wonder

A track from “Conversation Peace.” It’s a thrilling song with a bass and piano intro.
The horn section is cool, too.
Although it was released in 1995, it’s a song that makes you feel Stevie in the ’90s is not bad at all.
It also makes you want to hear it live.
[For Beginners] Songs in the Key of Life — A Collection of Stevie Wonder’s Masterpieces (121–130)
So What The FussStevie Wonder

A collaboration by Stevie Wonder, the American singer-songwriter Prince, and the R&B and pop vocal group En Vogue.
It was released in 2005.
It was sampled in Amerigo Gazaway’s 2017 track “The Sixth Wonder.”
To Feel The FireStevie Wonder

Back then, it was playing nonstop in coffee commercials.
Since the product was also called “FIRE,” I imagine the promotional effect was pretty strong.
The Japanese band ONE OK ROCK has covered it, turning it into a rock-tinged love ballad with a strong sense of melancholy.
Too HighStevie Wonder

This is the track that opens Innervisions.
From the very start it conveys a sense of tension.
There’s probably no other artist who can deliver such a thrilling performance that it makes the listener feel on edge.
The drums are played by Stevie himself—absolutely overwhelming.
The midsection’s interplay between the drumming and harmonica is aggressive as well.
You Got It Bad GirlStevie Wonder

These are tracks from “Talking Book.” The choral work is exquisite.
The synthesizers are ethereal and irresistibly immersive.
The coexistence of songs like this and more hard-hitting numbers like “Superstition” is part of what makes the album “Talking Book” so appealing.
Memories of Christmas (Someday at Christmas)Stevie Wonder

It turns out it wasn’t written by Stevie himself, and the original title’s Japanese translation is “Someday at Christmas.” It’s a Christmas song filled with love, carrying the hope that a world without war or racial discrimination will arrive on a Christmas Day someday.
Tasting Of The FireStevie Wonder
An American singer who has won Grammy Awards in a total of 22 categories, he is the most awarded male solo singer.
With its overwhelming vocal performance, this song is so strongly associated with Kirin Beverage’s canned coffee FIRE that it’s the one everyone thinks of when they hear about the commercial.





